Clear & Present Danger by Clancy, Tom

“The political angle is the one I don’t like.”

Moore chuckled. “Neither will the people from The Hill. So we have to keep it all secret, don’t we? If the President goes public to show that he’s ‘really doing something,’ the opposition will scream that he’s playing politics. If the opposition burns the operation, then the President can do the same thing. So both sides have a political interest in keeping this one under wraps. The election-year politics work in our favor. Clever fellow, that Admiral Cutter.”

“Not as clever as he thinks,” Ritter snorted. “But who is?”

“Yeah. Who is? You know, it’s a shame that James never got in on this.”

“Gonna miss him,” Ritter agreed. “God, I wish there was something I could take him, something to make it a little easier.”

“I know what you mean,” Judge Moore agreed. “Sooner or later, Ryan has to get in on this.”

“I don’t like it.”

“What you don’t like, Bob, is the fact that Ryan’s been involved in two highly successful field operations in addition to all the work he’s done at his desk. Maybe he did poach on your territory, but in both cases he had your support when he did so. Would you like him better if he’d failed? Robert, I don’t have Directorate chiefs so that they can get into pissing contests like Cutter and those folks on The Hill.”

Ritter blinked at the rebuke. “I’ve been saying for a long time that we brought him along too fast – which we have. I’ll grant you that he’s been very effective. But it’s also true that he doesn’t have the necessary political savvy for this sort of thing. He’s yet to establish the capacity needed for executive oversight. He has to fly over to Europe to represent us at the NATO intel conference. No sense dropping SHOWBOAT on him before he leaves, is there?”

Moore almost replied that Admiral Greer was out of the loop because of his physical condition, which was mainly, but only partly, true. The presidential directive mandated an extremely tight group of people who really knew what the counter-drug operations were all about. It was an old story in the intelligence game: sometimes security was so tight that people who might have had something important to offer were left out of the picture. It was not unknown, in fact, for those left out to have had knowledge crucial to the operation’s successful conclusion. But it was equally true that history was replete with examples of the disasters that resulted from making an operation so broadly based as to paralyze the decision-making process and compromise its secrecy. Drawing the line between operational security and operational efficiency was historically the most difficult task of an intelligence executive. There were no rules, Judge Moore knew, merely the requirement that such operations must succeed. One of the most persistent elements of spy fiction was the supposition that intelligence chiefs had an uncanny, infallible sixth sense of how to run their ops. But if the world’s finest surgeons could make mistakes, if the world’s best test pilots most often died in crashes – for that matter, if a pro-bowl quarterback could throw interceptions – why should a spymaster be any different? The only real difference between a wise man and a fool, Moore knew, was that the wise man tended to make more serious mistakes – and only because no one trusted a fool with really crucial decisions; only the wise had the opportunity to lose battles, or nations.

“You’re right about the NATO conference. You win, Bob. For now.” Judge Moore frowned at his desk. “How are things going?”

“All four teams are within a few hours’ march of their surveillance points. If everything goes according to plan, they’ll be in position by dawn tomorrow, and the following day they’ll begin feeding us information. The flight crew we bagged the other day coughed up all the preliminary information we need. At least two of the airfields we staked out are ‘hot.’ Probably at least one of the others is also.”

“The President wants me over tomorrow. It seems that the Bureau has tumbled to something important. Emil’s really hot about it. Seems that they’ve identified a major money-laundering operation.”

“Something we can exploit?”

“It would seem so. Emil’s treating it as code-word material.”

“Sauce for the goose,” Ritter observed with a smile. “Maybe we can put a real crimp in their operations.”

Chavez awoke from his second sleep period an hour before sundown. Sleep had come hard. Daytime temperatures were well over a hundred, and the high humidity made the jungle seem an oven despite being in shade. His first considered act was to drink over a pint of water – Gatorade – from his canteen to replace what he’d sweated off while asleep. Next came a couple of Tylenol. Light-fighters lived off the things to moderate the aches and pains that came with their normal physical regimen of exertion. In this case, it was a heat-induced headache that felt like a low-grade hangover.

“Why don’t we let ’em keep this fucking place?” he muttered to Julio.

“Roger that, ‘mano.” Vega chuckled in return.

Sergeant Chavez wrenched himself to a sitting position, shaking off the cobwebs as he did so. He rubbed a hand over his face. The heavy beard he’d had since puberty was growing with its accustomed rapidity, but he wouldn’t shave today. That merited a grunt. Normal Army routine was heavy on personal hygiene, and light infantrymen, as elite soldiers, were supposed to be “pretty” troops. Already he stank like a basketball team after double overtime, but he wouldn’t wash, either. Nor would he don a clean uniform. But he would, of course, clean his weapon again. After making sure that Julio had already serviced his SAW, Chavez stripped his MP-5 down to six pieces and inspected them all visually. The matte-black finish resisted rust quite well. Regardless, he wiped everything down with oil, ran a toothbrush along all operation parts, checked to see that all springs were taut and magazines were not fouled with dirt or grit. Satisfied, he reassembled the weapon and worked the action quietly to make certain that it functioned smoothly. Finally, he inserted the magazine, chambered a round, and set the safety. Next he checked that his knives were clean and sharp. This included his throwing stars, of course.

“The captain’s gonna be pissed if he sees them,” Vega observed quietly.

“They’re good luck,” Chavez replied as he put them back in his pocket. ” ‘Sides, you never know…” He checked the rest of his gear. Everything was as it should be. He was ready for the day’s work. Next the maps came out.

“That where we’re goin’?”

“RENO.” Chavez pointed to the spot on the tactical map. “Just under five klicks.” He examined the map carefully, making several mental notes and again committing the details to memory. The map had no marks on it, of course. If lost or captured, such marks would tell the wrong people things that they ought not to know.

“Here.” Captain Ramirez joined the two, handing over a satellite photograph.

“These maps must be new, sir.”

“They are. DMA” – he referred to the Defense Mapping Agency – “didn’t have good maps of this area until recently. They were drawn up from the satellite photos. See any problems?”

“No, sir.” Chavez looked up with a smile. “Nice and flat, lots of thinned-out trees-looks easier than last night, Cap’n.”

“When we get in close, I want you to approach from this angle here into the objective rally point.” Ramirez traced his hand across the photo. “I’ll make the final approach with you for the ‘leader’s recon.'”

“You the boss, sir,” Ding agreed.

“Plan the first break point right here, Checkpoint SPIKE.”

“Right.”

Ramirez stuck his head up, surveying the area. “Remember the briefing. These guys may have very good security, and be especially careful for booby traps. You see something, let me know immediately – as long as it’s safe to do so. When in doubt, remember the mission is covert.”

“I’ll get us there, sir.”

“Sorry, Ding,” Ramirez apologized. “I must sound like a nervous woman.”

“You ain’t got the legs for it, sir,” Chavez pointed out with a grin.

“You up to carrying that SAW another night, Oso?” Ramirez asked Vega.

“I carried heavier toothpicks, jefe.”

Ramirez laughed and made off to check the next pair.

“I’ve known worse captains than that one,” Vega observed when he was gone.

“Hard worker,” Chavez allowed. Sergeant Olivero appeared next.

“How’s your water?” the medic asked.

“Both a quart low,” Vega replied.

“Both of you, drink a quart down right now.”

“Come on, doc,” Chavez protested.

“No dickin’ around, people. Somebody gets heatstroke and it’s my ass. If you ain’t gotta piss, you ain’t been drinking enough. Pretend it’s a Corona,” he suggested as both men took out their canteens. “Remember that: if you don’t have to piss, you need a drink. Damn it, Ding, you oughta know that, you spent time at Hunter-Liggett. This fucking climate’ll dry your ass out in a heartbeat, and I ain’t carrying your ass, dried-out or not.”

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